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Sunday, 24 April 2011

Happy St Georges Day. Patriots! Saturday 23rd…

Goodbye to my England,So long my old friend,Your days are numbered,Being brought to an end.

To be Scottish,Irish or Welsh that’s fine,But don’t say you’re English,That’s way out of line.

The French and the Germans may call themselves such,So may Norwegians, the Swedes and the Dutch,You can say you are Russian or maybe a Dane,But don’t say you’re English – ever again.

At Broadcasting House the word is taboo,In Brussels it’s scrapped, in Parliament too,Even schools are affected, staff do as they’re told,They must not teach children about England of old.

Writers like Shakespeare, Milton and Shaw,The pupils don’t learn about them anymore,How about Agincourt, Hastings, Arnhem or Mons ?When England lost hosts of her very brave sons.

We are not Europeans, how can we be?Europe is miles away over the seaWe’re the English from England, let’s all be proudStand up and be counted – Shout it out loud !

Let’s tell our Government and Brussels too,We’re proud of our heritage and the Red, White and Blue,Fly the flag of Saint George or the Union JackLet the world know – WE WANT OUR ENGLAND BACK !!!!

The Beginnings

It was not part of their blood,It came to them very lateWith long arrears to make good,When the English began to hate.

They were not easily moved,They were icy-willing to waitTill every count should be proved,Ere the English began to hate.

Their voices were even and low,Their eyes were level and straight.There was neither sign nor show,When the English began to hate.

It was not preached to the crowd,It was not taught by the State.No man spoke it aloud,When the English began to hate.

It was not suddenly bred,It will not swiftly abate,Through the chill years ahead,When Time shall count from the dateThat the English began to hate.

So all those who were pilloried over the years for accusing Labour of being Communist bed-fellows have been proved right. And perhaps more frighteningly correct than they ever imagined.

And for how long was Kinnock near the seat of power in Brussels?………

I went to the final Labour party rally in Leeds Town hall in 1987. An old trade unionist at the end of my street got me a ticket.

The pull of my local football team, combined with a sh*t school and then eventually the acid-house revolution totally obliterated any persuit whatsoever in regard to Labour politics, soon afterwards.

Let’s face facts; would anyone like to end up like the f*ckwits running the country right now? Hopefully not.

The point is this; I saw with my own eyes Hattersley with his fist clenched in the air calling everyone ‘comrade’ through out his speech. Kinnock did the same.

To me it was very impressive for a 14 year old.

The things is though, nailed on, these people are (past and present) Marxists / Careerists (or both) of the highest order in my opinion.

At least back then they didn’t try to hide it as much.

Short led a delegation of Labour dignitaries on a visit to the Kremlin, including party chair William Simpson, general secretary Ron Hayward, and a few other MPs and apparatchiks eager for face-time with General Secretary Brezhnev and his Foreign Minister Gromyko — a media coup they hoped would help them defeat Heath. Chernyaev’s entry from 6 June shows he was clearly amused. He quotesthem as saying:

‘We came here as a political party which wants to be in power. If you, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, want a Labour government in Britain, help us. We have to be received by Brezhnev and Gromyko. Even if for five minutes. It only matters for us that we saw them and we can tell the press about it. Discussions, of course, would be good. We are even willing to listen to your recommendations on our new foreign policy program. But the main thing is support for the prestige for the Labour party from your side. At the London airport, tens of journalists came to see us off, and they are waiting gloatingly for our return. Unless you meet us halfway, all of England will be laughing at us for a week. And we will most likely lose the upcoming general elections.’

So Hayward envisioned a real Soviet-style system in Britain: with the Party General Secretary — not the MPs’ leader — at the top. Chernyaev’s diary says he would refer to himself as the party leader. Or, specifically, as ‘the first Labour leader in history who is not afraid to come out alongside communists with the same agenda’, Chernyaev quotes. He even stated later in that meeting that Hayward ‘prepares young people, puts them in the right places, helps them to become prominent’. Such was the backdrop to the civil war that would then engulf the Labour party where the pro-communist faction crushed moderates and Trotskyites.

COMRADE FOOT

More recently Michael Foot has successfully sued newspapers who claimed he was somehow a Soviet ‘agent of influence’. But Chernyaev’s diaries show that the former Labour leader was by no means hostile to the Soviets. In October 1981 he led a big delegation to Moscow, to discuss Britain’s unilateral disarmament. Chernyaev notes ‘the Labour party’s metamorphosis: pragmatism, cynicism, frankness…’

All this repeated itself three years later, after Foot was succeeded by Neil Kinnock, and Brezhnev by the completely senile Konstantin Chernenko. Kinnock came to Moscow accompanied by, among others, the young Charles Clarke and Patricia Hewitt. Here is Chernyaev’s account, dated 1 December 1984:

Chernyaev records how Charles Clarke, then Kinnock’s chief of staff, wanted to mention human rights in the communiqué. However, the Soviets said it was ‘awkward’ to ‘extort human rights’ on the top of such generous disarmament promises.

which they now continue under Red Dave!

Today, we know that the union leader Jack Jones, once regarded as the most powerful man in Britain, was a KGB agent for most of his life. He was exposed by his last case officer, Colonel Oleg Gordievsky — the most famous MI6 agent in the KGB. Jones’s trade union — Transport and General Workers (T&G) — was the most powerful one in the Labour party. Its block vote covered 18 per cent of the total at annual conferences, and it effectively controlled dozens of safe Labour seats in parliament. Furthermore, T&G was notoriously undemocratic, with the General Secretary enjoying almost dictatorial power, and its political activity controlled by Jones’s unelected deputy, Alec Kitson. On 5 April 1980, soon after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Chernyaev saw Kitson in Moscow:

I had prepared all thinkable arguments concerning Afghanistan, but he did not wish to hear them. ‘I don’t need to be persuaded,’ he said, ‘I understand everything without it, but I am “marked”. As “a Soviet agent” and “a traitor”, I simply won’t be listened to. As for you, none of you are ever there to be heard. The embassy is doing nothing. And if there are any Soviet visitors, they are only interested in buying another pair of trousers.’

He was quite drunk already, after seeing Soviet trade unionists. That is why he was violent and rude. There was a ‘fuck’ in about every sentence. I was ironic, joked, tried to insert the prepared arguments. As he was getting soberer, it became possible to get some particular things out of him. So, what we have agreed:

(a) We will send some clever guys to the Scottish Trade Union Congress. There will be an audience arranged for them and they will be able to deliver the Soviet point of view;

(b) He will try to gather trade union functionaries in London, and the same guys will carry out a ‘discussion’ with them;

(c) I will write a private letter to Jenny Little (the secretary of Labour NEC’s International Committee, ‘a pretty bitch, but can do business, and in love with you,’ — Kitson’s words), suggesting an unofficial discussion, either in London or in Moscow, at our level, i.e. the one of party apparatchiks.

By the way, Jenny Little appears in the diary time and again as quite a romantic figure. On 19 November 1977, Chernyaev describes his meeting with Kitson and Little in the Soviet embassy in London: ‘Jenny got drunk, cried, and kept trying to force a kiss on me. It took quite a time to pack them off.’

On the whole, however, the communist infiltration of the T&G is hardly a joking matter: its influence in the Labour party was substantial. The decision to give Gordon Brown his first and only safe seat, Dunfermline East, was made by two T&G officials: Hugh Wyper, the regional boss and a Communist Party member, and Alec Kitson. This is not exceptional. Neil Kinnock, Tony Blair, Margaret Beckett, Harriet Harman, John Reid — to name just a few — were all T&G people who made their Labour party careers thanks to the union’s backing. And at that time, of course, T&G political backing was within the gift of Alec Kitson. Chernyaev only saw part of the story however. Other documents, still secret, show Labour’s Soviet relationships ran still deeper.Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva.

We now call them Fabians- but thats’ just a name- These are Traitors destroying ENGLAND from within!

Reaching through the Iron Curtain

In the pages of the Kremlin’s secret diary, Pavel Stroilov discovers what Labour’s Soviet sympathisers said when they thought no one was listening

The Spy Scandal: The Recruits – The Labour MP and bent detective who worked for Moscow

Romeo spy KGBAutobiography of the KGB Romeo Spy John Alexander Symonds. … He was to become master of his lodge, eloquent proof of the influence exercised by the Brethren. … the Labour MP whom I had caught engaged in buggery with another man. ……www.slideshare.net/parellic/romeo-spy-kgb<

Blair’s Jewish paymasters

Blair with EU chums.

In the corrupt world of today’s politics, those who finance a political leader also control him. So who controls Blair? The vast majority of the finances of Blair and his Labour Party come from Jewish millionaires. Below is a list of Jews who have been revealed by the media as regularly contributing at least £100,000to Blair and his party.